Nichols v. Dewey

Chapman, J.

Upon the facts agreed, the court are of opinion that the plaintiff is entitled to recover. By virtue of the sheriff’s deed, and his open and peaceable entry under it, he became seised and possessed of the land conveyed to him, with the *387exception of the possession of the two dwelling-houses, which the defendants still continued to occupy. Their continued occupation was merely as tenants at sufferance. The plaintiff’s forbidding them to take or interfere with the grass or any of the crops growing upon the land had no other effect than to give them notice of his claim. By cutting the grass and storing it in the barns on the land, they committed a trespass, but did not change the title or possession. It was the plaintiff’s hay, stored in his own barn. But it had become personal property by being severed from the land, and his title to it was disconnected with his title to the land. He had a right to take it, or bring an action of replevin for it against any one who might claim it.

But the defendants contend that his writs of entry which he subsequently brought to recover not only the dwelling-houses but the land are a bar to his action of replevin for the hay, because they say the taking of the hay was a taking of mesne profits, and the writ of entry is an exclusive remedy for mesne profits, and they cite to this point Raymond v. Andrews, 6 Cush. 265. The answer to this position is, that the writ of entry is an exclusive remedy for the mesne profits that accrued merely while the land was held by disseisin.

But the plaintiff in his writ of entry treated the defendants as disseisors by election, for the mere technical purpose of the remedy, and it does not appear that the gathering of the hay was relied upon or regarded as a disseisin. It is to be inferred from the statement of facts that it was otherwise, and that the action was brought for subsequent acts of disseisin ; and as no damages were recovered or claimed in that suit for cutting the hay, the defence rests on a mere technical ground, and the apparent equity accords with the legal view which we have taken, and which distinguishes the case from that of Raymond v. Andrews. Judgment for the plaintiff.